
ViolinViolinJOHANNESJOHANNES SonatasSonatas BRAHMSBRAHMS PETER WINOGRAD, violin | DAVID WESTFALL, piano WWW.ALBANYRECORDS.COM TROY1847 ALBANY RECORDS U.S. 915 BROADWAY, ALBANY, NY 12207 TEL: 518.436.8814 FAX: 518.436.0643 ALBANY RECORDS U.K. BOX 137, KENDAL, CUMBRIA LA8 0XD TEL: 01539 824008 © 2021 ALBANY RECORDS MADE IN THE USA DDD WARNING: COPYRIGHT SUBSISTS IN ALL RECORDINGS ISSUED UNDER THIS LABEL. THE COMPOSER Johannes Brahms (Born in Hamburg, Germany, May 7, 1833; died in Vienna, Austria, April 3, 1897) In 1890, the Viennese intelligentsia smiled knowingly at a caricature published in the “ . .HIS COMPOSITIONS ARE satirical journal Figaro depicting Johannes Brahms on an ornate pedestal, with music critic Eduard Hanslick gazing up at the composer in humble admiration. Though the drawing poked fun at Hanslick’s effusive praise of Brahms and his music, nonetheless it MASTERFUL, MEMORABLE, was accurate in its prediction that Brahms would occupy a perpetual niche in the marbled pantheon of “classical” composers, alongside Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven. It had been a long journey from the humble Hamburg home where Brahms had been SUFFUSED WITH MELODY, born in 1833. His father, Johann Jakob Brahms, who played various instruments with moderate proficiency, made his living as a municipal musician. In 1830, he had married AND ALWAYS TRUE TO HIS Johanna Henrika Christiane Nissen, a seamstress seventeen years his elder. Johannes was the second of their three children, sharing the home with an older sister and a younger brother. UNIQUE VOICE. .” From an early age, Johannes Brahms showed deep musical talent as well as a gritty determination to transcend his humble birth and find his place in the world outside Hamburg. His father gave him his first music lessons at age four, before arranging for piano lessons (at age seven) with Otto Friedrich Willibald Cossel, a student of the highly- regarded Hamburg teacher and pianist Eduard Marxsen. Brahms applied himself with diligence to the piano, but the urge to create his own music manifested itself early on; as Cossel observed, Brahms “could be a good player, but he will not stop his never-ending composing!” Cossel devoted himself to Johannes’ musical development, insisting on good technique in balance with musical expression, advising the boy that the fingers “should be able to express what the heart feels.” In 1843, Brahms’ father arranged a public concert of chamber music to promote his 10-year-old son’s prospects. An impresario in the audience suggested to the ambitious father that a “prodigy” tour to the United States might be lucrative. Johann Jakob jumped on numerous occasions in Hamburg. While on tour, Brahms met other musicians, at the chance, but Cossel, fearing the worst, appealed to Marxsen. After teaching the boy including Peter Cornelius, Joachim Raff, Franz Liszt, and, most importantly for his for three years Cossel felt that he had nothing more to offer, particularly in composition, personal and professional life to come, Josef Joachim. and persuaded Marxsen to take Brahms on, not only to provide more advanced instruc- Just twenty-two, Joachim was already among the most celebrated musicians in tion, but to keep him in Hamburg. Marxsen agreed, and soon Johannes was studying Europe, protégé of Mendelssohn and Liszt, and concertmaster in Liszt’s court orchestra, piano with Cossel and studying piano and composition with Marxsen, including learning which was devoted to the revolutionary “New German School” of composition (essen- about earlier composers, especially Bach. Brahms had already written some songs and tially, the promotion of Liszt’s own music). Joachim, who had begun to feel disillusioned small piano pieces, and at age eleven composed his first piano sonata. Marxsen marveled with Liszt’s grandiosity and bombastic music, sought a more substantial musical vision at the boy’s abilities: “When I started teaching him composition, he exhibited a rare acute- that he could champion. In Hanover, Joachim’s friend Reményi introduced him to Brahms ness of mind, and, insignificant though his first attempts at original creation turned out to and persuaded him to hear the young pianist. Joachim later wrote, “Never in the course of be, I was bound to recognize in them an intelligence which convinced me that an excep- my artist’s life have I been more completely overwhelmed with delighted surprise, than tional, great, and peculiarly profound talent was dormant in him.” When Mendelssohn when the rather shy-mannered, blonde companion of my countryman played me his sona- died in 1847, Marxsen observed, “A great master of the musical art has gone hence, but ta movements, of quite undreamt-of originality and power, looking noble and inspired the an even greater one will bloom for us in Brahms.” while. His playing, so tender, so imaginative, so free and so fiery, held me spell-bound.” Brahms’ parents initially regarded their son’s talent less as a creative gift than as the Joachim arranged for Brahms to play for George V, King of Hanover, and introduced means to ply a trade, namely, playing for money. Before he had turned thirteen, young Brahms to Liszt in Weimar. The meeting permanently soured Brahms and Liszt on each Johannes was working as a pianist in the dance halls on the Hamburg docks. He suffered other; Brahms took an instinctive dislike to Liszt’s freewheeling music, and fell asleep as from the unsavory company and late nights, but he was able to keep up with his studies Liszt played to an otherwise-enraptured salon audience. Liszt never forgave the slight. and practice. More importantly, Joachim introduced Brahms to Robert and Clara Schumann, Brahms’ professional debut took place in 1847, when he contributed a piano solo to with whom Joachim had formed a close personal and professional alliance, and who a public recital; his first full solo recital took place the next year, and in 1849, at a second shared his vision for a music that would embody “formalism and continuity with the solo recital, he performed his own music in public for the first time, a waltz-fantasia. past” (Swafford). Brahms, who showed up on the Schumanns’ Düsseldorf doorstep in Hamburg had a robust musical scene, with several orchestral and choral ensembles September 1853, astounded the composer and his pianist-wife as they listened to him play and frequent performances by visiting artists, including Robert and Clara Schumann, one after another of his compositions. Robert said to Clara, “Here is music as you have who were later to become so important to him. In 1848 Johannes attended a concert in never heard before!” Robert’s famously effusive public praise of the young composer Berlin by the great Hungarian violinist Josef Joachim, who would become Brahms’ great appeared in the October 28 issue of the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik: “I have thought [that] friend and musical confidant. (Brahms later told Joachim, “I was your most enraptured someone must and would suddenly appear, destined to give ideal presentment to the high- listener!”) est expression of the time, who would bring us his mastership, not in process of develop- In the spring of 1853, Brahms embarked on his first concert tour to concertize with ment, but would spring forth like Minerva fully armed from the head of Jove. And he is the Hungarian violinist Eduard Reményi (1828-1898), with whom Brahms had performed come…. He is called Johannes Brahms.” Thus, just six months after the obscure youth had set out from Hamburg, the name In 1857, he returned to Hamburg, where he directed a women’s choir and worked “Johannes Brahms” was now on the lips of Europe’s musical cognoscenti. Still, it would at composing. Over the next few decades, he would direct and compose for many be many years before he would fulfill the expectations raised by Schumann’s praise, and choirs, and singers (especially the women) were a constant source of inspiration and he would labor long and hard to meet his own exacting standards. In writing his thanks companionship. to Schumann, Brahms cautioned, “The public praise you have bestowed on me will have For the next several years, Brahms led a rather peripatetic life, composing, fastened general expectation so exceptionally upon my performances that I do not know conducting, and performing, always searching for a place that suited his temperament how I shall be able to do some measure of justice to it. Above all it obliges me to take where he could work productively. He lived and worked in Berlin (1858) Hamburg the greatest care in the selection of what is to be published.” And Brahms did, indeed, (1859), Winterthür (1860), Vienna and Hamm (1861-1862), and Köln and Hamburg take “the greatest care,” destroying his early works, withholding others from publication, (1862). In late 1862, he returned to Vienna, where he performed, broadened his and above all, delaying composing in the large-scale forms that would inevitably invite professional acquaintance, and was appointed conductor of the Weiner Singakademie, a comparison to those of his predecessors and peers: symphonies, string quartets, and major position that he hoped would enhance his eligibility for other directorships, particularly choral works. that of the Hamburg Philharmonic, a post he coveted but never attained. Increasingly, The Schumanns welcomed Brahms into their close-knit family, and when in 1854 Brahms turned to Vienna, and though he occasionally performed in and visited Hamburg Robert suffered a mental breakdown, attempted suicide, and was confined to a sanitorium (where his mother died in 1865, and his father in 1872), by 1868 he had taken up (where he died in 1856), Brahms essentially moved into their home, assisting Clara (preg- permanent residence in the Austrian capital. nant with her eighth child) and caring for the other children.
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